The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, January 14, 1986 - Page 3 * ° M LSA students .may face more 8 a.m. classes By NANCY DRISCOLL More students could wind up atten- ding 8 a.m. and evening classes if the. proposed renovation of the East Engineering Building takes place as scheduled in 1987. In a report to the LSA faculty yesterday, James Cather, associate dean for curriculum and ad- ministration, said that to accomodate the shutdown of 18 East Engineering classrooms, departments will have to schedule more classes during the less desirable times - before 9 am and af- ter 3 pm. RICHARD KENNEDY, vice president for state relations, said that the $16-22 million project is expected to get initial state approval and fun- ding within a month. If all goes as planned, construction could begin in April 1987, Kennedy added. Cather urged the LSA faculty to ap- prove a two-year renovation plan, which would completely shut down the building. The other option is a four-year plan that would allow some classrooms to remain available during the construction. SBut Cather noted the classrooms would be noisy from the construction and that a longer plan could cost significantly more. Cather said that only 20 percent of the LSA classrooms are currently being used at 8 a.m., while 80-90 per- cent of the rooms are utilized between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. "The only way we can make it work is to reschedule before 9 and after 3," Cather said. Some faculty members raised con- cern about whether students would register for 8 a.m. classes. But Cather responded, "I think we would have no difficulty." LSA Dean Peter Steiner agreed, and said that depar- tments could schedule their most popular classes at 8 a.m. "The way it works is that students will be coerced into taking class at 8 or not at all," Steiner said. Although there was no formal vote, the faculty agreed to accept the two- year plan. The final decision is up to the University's executive officers. Speaking to faculty members, Steiner said the college was facing a two- to five-year crisis for classroom space. "Our student load has in- creased over the last two to three years and is expected to increase even more," Steiner said. In addition, Steiner said the college needs to create more space for com- puters. He and Cather have submit- ted to the executive officers a 10-year plan to create the needed space. Besides the availability of classrooms, their report addresses the problem of scattered departments and needed building renovations. Daily Photo by DAN HABIB Lisa Farley, window designer for Middle Earth on South University Friday fooled a few passers-by who mistook her for a mannequin in a New Year's display. is she alive? Designer stumps passers-by *U.S. won't sanction Syria By LAURIE DELATER Lisa Farley says she was "just trying to liven things up a bit." At least that's the reason she gave for playing dead Friday in the front window of Middle Earth on South University. Farley, the designer behind Middle Earth's always eye- catching window displays, had passers-by stopping, doing double- takes, and tapping on the glass to see if she was really a human. Wioth ier jet black hair wound up in curlers and a handkerchief, her fair skin heavily made -up, her eyes hid- den behind cat-eye glasses, and her bathrobed body slumped in an old arm chair, Farley was the center- piece of a display entitled, "A Toast to New Year's." SLICES of toasted bread were scat- tered about the floor, on a table behind Farley's chair, and on a small black and white TV which was turned on all day. About the time The Flintstones came on - around 10 a.m. - Farley began to concentrate on not moving when passers-by walked up to the window. "People don't realize I can hear them through the glass," the 1984 art school graduate said later in the af- ternoon. "But they were wondering whether or not I was a mannequin. I guess I should have drawn black lines on my wrists to look like joints. "Some kids would stand here for about two minutes, waiting to see if I would breathe. I could barely hold my breath that long." Farley said she had been stumped for a display theme because Christ- mas had left her short on regular items stocked in the store and because January is generally an unexciting month. That was until her boss challenged her to try a "live" display. WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States has "no plan or thought" to im- pose sanctions against Syria, despite intelligence reports that the terrorists who attacked the Rome and Vienna airports last month were trained in the Syrian-controlled Bekka Valley in Lebanon and traveled through Damascus on the way to the airport * assaults, Secretary of State George P. Shultz said. "To what extent, of course . .. that involved the Syrian authorities, we're not able to say," Shultz said Sunday on the CBS program "Face the Nation." President Reagan, citing evidence of Libyan support of the terrorists, last week froze Libyan assets in the United States and ordered an economic boycott of that nation. SHULTZ said while Syria is on the State Department's list of countries supporting terrorism, "Syria's behavior toward all these things is rather different from Libya's." "And beyond that, of course, we are working with Syria on a number of fronts in a constructive way," Shultz added. Shultz was apparently responding to Syrian officials quoted in Sunday editions of The New York Times, who expressed irritation over remarks last week by a U.S. official that sanctions might be imposed against Syria. Robert Oakley, head of the State Department's counterterrorism unit was asked by reporters last Thursday if sanctions might be imposed against Syria. "It could possibly come to that," he replied. OAKLEY also charged that Syria supports Abu Nidal, the renegade Palestinian faction U.S. officials believe was responsible for the Dec. 27 attacks on the European airports 'U'student to welcome husband from Soviet Union Shultz that killed five people and left 19 wounded. Shultz said the Reagan ad- ministration decision to focus on Libya in its anti-terrorist campaign was due to what he called "a whole pattern of terrorist activity" carried out by the government of Col Moam- mar Khadafy. Shultz refused to comment on reports that the United States was contemplating other actions against the Khadafy government, ranging from military strikes to providing covert support to opposition groups or efforts to overthrow the Khadafy regime. Defense Secretary Caspar Wein- berger, appearing on the ABC program "This week with David Brinkley," said "We have certainly the means, we have the capabilities of doing other things," without elaborating on what other steps might be taken. (Continued from Page 1) Michigan also wrote letters, she says as did administrators here at the University. President Harold Shapiro, LSA Dean Peter Steiner, and Engineering Dean James Duderstadt wrote letters on her behalf, Gubin says they argued for Lodisev's release as only fair, given the University's fair treatment of visiting professors from the Soviet Union. The battle has taken its toll both emotionally and physically on Gubin. A YEAR-and-a-half ago Gubin took a leave of absence from the Univer- sity because, as she explains, "I could not support myself, work on my dissertation, and lobby for my husband's release at the same time." She has lived with her parents in Kalamazoo and worked for her father's company in the interim. She visited her husband in July 1982 and again last August. Until recently, she ran up monthly telephone bills of $300 for calls to the Soviet Union and to Washington. Her constant lobbying bore fruit November, when Soviet officials an- nounced the list of 10 citizens who would be permitted to emigrate to the United States. That same day, the American under-Secretary of State called Gubin and told her that her husband's name was on that list. THE NEXT day Gubin called Lodisev to give him the news. He then contacted Soviet officials who confir- med that his name was among those on the list. Lodisev was told, however, that he would have to reapply to get an exit visa. He received it just one week ago and last weekend boarded a train to Moscow from his hometown, Kiev. He is scheduled to arrive in Newark, New Jersey next Monday. She hopes that she and her husband can move to Ann Arbor, where he will try to find a job as a computer programmer and she will resume her studies at the University. Gubin believes she and her husband CONSIDERING AN ABORTION? Complete Confidential Information Pregnancy Counseling Center 529 N. Hewitt, Ypsilanti Call: 434-3088 (any time) - - - - would have been reunited sometime this year, but she says the summit un- doubtedly helped spur his release. "I'M GLAD there was a summit irrespective of my position . . . I feel the summit helped." "I don't think this issue should be part of politics . . . I think it demon- strates a lack of seriousness on their part. This gesture shows they are becoming more serious, but only when it ends (keeping families separated) will *e know that they are definitely serious." The excitement and disdain are still audible in her voice when she explains that her role for the coalition is not over. "I'm hopeful that the time if right, that relationships are getting better, and that this new regime is smarter than the last one ... We're hopeful we will see the resolution of all of these cases ... and I certainly will continue until this occurs." -HAPPENINGS Highlight William Holinger, assistant professor of English literature, will read from and speak about his first novel, The Fence Walker, about an American soldier in Korea in 1968. The lecture, sponsored by the Ann Ar- bor Public Library's Booked for Lunch program, will begin at 12:10 p.m. at the library, 343S. Fifth Ave. Films Michigan Theater Foundation - Body Double, 8 & 10 p.m., Michigan Theater. Performances School of Music - Recital, trumpet, Daniel D'Addio, 8 p.m., Rackham Assembly Hall. Speakers Psychobiology - Ernest Johnson, "Cardiovascular and Behavioral Concommitants of Anger: Implications for Treating Hypertension and the Type-A behavior Pattern," 12:30 p.m., room 1057, MHRI. Chemistry - David M. Hercules, "Surface Analytical Studies of Heterogeneous Catalysts," 4 p.m., room 1300, Chemistry Bldg. School of Business Administration - Arthur M. Stein, "The Investor Owned Health Care Service Industry," 4:15 p.m., Assembly Hall. Ecumenical Campus Center - Lunch forum, Michiyo Yamamoto, "Japanese Women Today," noon, 603 E. Madison. Biology - James H. Brown, "Ecology of Desert Rodents'; Community Organization and Impact on Ecosystems," 4 p.m., room 3056, Nat. Sci. Bldg. Buy $15 Worth of School Supplies and GET 0%0FF YOUR N EW TEXTBOOKS! So stock up on - PENS & PENCILS * NOTEBOOKS 'PAPER - BINDERS - BACKPACKS " OFFICE SUPPLIES - ARTISTS' MATERIALS - COMPUTER SUPPLIES " MICHIGAN CLOTHING * GREETING CARDS . ~' . .. ,rti::; 7: b: : :t} 4 : }:1:" :Y:" COMEDY COMPANY Ann Arbors own Comedy Theater Troupe Buy your suppliesfor the semester and get